Te Puke Times

Park celebrates its 10th birthday

Event planned at Pendergras­t Memorial Heritage Park

- Stuart Whitaker

Adecade of work on a memorial heritage park will be marked at a celebratio­n on Saturday. The charitable trust that manages the Pendergras­t Memorial Heritage Park was formed in 2013, but plans to mark its 10th anniversar­y in November fell foul of bad weather.

There is a silver lining, however, and the celebratio­n is now part of Envirohub’s month-long Sustainabl­e Backyards programme.

The land was gifted by Jim Pendergras­t in memory of his late wife, Ngaire.

Jim, who died in 2017, was a wellknown farmer, historian and conservati­onist, and the family lived on a Mangatoi Rd farm. For years he fought to preserve the nearby O¯ ta¯newainuku forest from logging. In 2002, he became a founding trustee of the O¯ ta¯newainuke Kiwi Trust and made a huge contributi­on to the establishm­ent of the intensive pest management network that now protects the flora and fauna of O¯ ta¯ newainuku.

Jim’s son Hans recalls his father’s passion for the environmen­t and his desire to see a place where young people could learn about and experience the outdoors

“He had always been aware of the need for conservati­on, but it was really my granddad (John) who got him started. He grew up in Te Whaiti, a sawmilling town, and dad saw this mass destructio­n of rimu and matai as the sawmills just levelled the countrysid­e.

“When they came to Mangatoi, they utilised the rimu logs lying around, but both of them had that background that they were not going to touch the reserves, the forest that had been set aside which was all of O¯ ta¯newainuku — they were going to do everything they had to to make sure it wasn’t touched.

“My granddad and dad were part of a community that stood up and prevented the developers from chopping down O¯ta¯newainuku.”

He says that gave Jim an inbuilt conservati­on ethic that sat side by side with an enjoyment of being in the forest.

“He used to take us there as kids and I’ve taken my kids camping based on that experience, so there’s been the whole generation­al thing of really enjoying the forest and appreciati­ng it for what it is.”

Jim didn’t just want to share that with his family, he wanted to provide somewhere for the community to learn. The land was bought from a neighbour after Ngaire died.

“He had it in his heart to do it as a memory to Mum, but the driving force was more to do with providing an opportunit­y for young people to enjoy the outdoors and enjoy conservati­on and learn ecology and learn botany and provide opportunit­ies. That was really the driving force and that gets reflected in the constituti­on of the trust.”

Jim and Ngaire shared a passion for the environmen­t.

“They supported each other all the way along, but it was dad’s experience back in the early days that set it off. The two of them loved hiking and tramping, particular­ly mum, she’d tramped all over the world.

“That enjoyment of the outdoors and appreciati­on of the outdoors and the need to protect the outdoors — they were both in that area.”

The park is 21 hectares and about 15ha is currently native bush, with a planting programme in place to reforest another 4 hectares.

There is an area of about 2ha that is flat land to be left grassed to allow for buildings and car parking and to provide a clean and environmen­tally friendly campsite for schools, universiti­es and the public.

Jim started planting back in 2012. He planted mainly rimu, totara, matai, kahikatea, rewarewa and kowhai and would have planted more than 500 trees over this time. Thousands of trees have been planted since.

The trust hopes to finish the reforestat­ion programme in 2025, and then concentrat­e on finishing the track-building programme and establishi­ng a comprehens­ive predator-trapping programme.

Saturday’s celebratio­n starts at 1.30pm and includes guided walks around the park, speeches, tree planting and a barbecue.

Anyone wanting to attend is asked to send an email to pmhptrust@gmail. com.

 ?? ?? Students from Toi Ohomai at the Pendergras­t Memorial Heritage Park.
Students from Toi Ohomai at the Pendergras­t Memorial Heritage Park.
 ?? ?? Signs at the Pendergras­t Memorial Heritage Park.
Signs at the Pendergras­t Memorial Heritage Park.

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